The Minnesota Family Council considers it providence. Gov. Jesse
Ventura's office says it was a mistake. Whatever the case, Minnesota's
staunchly secular governor has proclaimed Oct. 13-19 Christian Heritage
Week.

Ventura's office tried unsuccessfully Wednesday to undo the
proclamation it filed earlier in the day with the secretary of state's
office.

The order, bearing Ventura's signature, runs counter to his
long-standing opposition to mixing government and religion. Throughout his
term, he repeatedly has refused to sign similar proclamations.

One of the proclamations Ventura refused to sign was one for a National
Day of Prayer.

Less than a month ago, he riled some religious Minnesotans by issuing a
proclamation at the request of an atheist group.

The new order -- the most noteworthy of 17 submitted Wednesday -- cites
comments and writings of Benjamin Franklin, George Washington, Thomas
Jefferson, James Madison, Patrick Henry and George Mason and recognizes
them as statesmen "who did not hesitate to express their faith."

The proclamation quotes Washington as saying, "Animated alone by the
pure spirit of Christianity, and conducting ourselves as the faithful
subjects of our free government, we may enjoy every temporal and spiritual
felicity."

"Somehow it got in the wrong pile," Ventura's spokesman John Wodele
said. "It would not have been approved."

It's too late to take it back, a spokesman for Secretary of State Mary
Kiffmeyer said. "There is no deproclamatizing. Once it's filed, it's
filed," said Kent Kaiser. "It's not like every time they send something we
call over and ask, 'Did you mean it?' "

Early in his term, Ventura personally reviewed each proclamation
request. But as requests mounted, he delegated the duty to his director of
citizen outreach, who considers them with the governor's principles in
mind and uses an autopen to affix his signature.

The Virginia-based Christian Heritage Ministries has asked for the
proclamation each year Ventura has been in office. Previously, his office
sent a certificate of recognition when the ministries requested the more
formal proclamation, Wodele said.

He said Ventura will again send a certificate, despite the inadvertent
signing of the proclamation, along with a letter of explanation and
apology if the group is confused or embarrassed by the mix-up and
resulting publicity. Kiffmeyer may send the group the formal proclamation
if she decides to.

The group's Web site notes that Christian Heritage Week observances
have occurred in more than 40 states and aim to recognize "the Christian
principles upon which our country was founded, and thus glorifying the God
of our fathers and resuscitating the historic, biblical legacy which is
ours."

Tom Prichard, president of the Minnesota Family Council, said the
slip-up is poetic justice. He has criticized Ventura for not signing the
day of prayer proclamation and for disparaging religion in a 1999 Playboy
magazine interview.

"Inadvertently, or providentially some might say, he's recognized the
role of faith and religion in our society," he said. "We'll gladly accept
that."